Recent

Check Out Our Forum Tab!

Click On The "Forum" Tab Under The Logo For More Content!
If you are using your phone, click on the menu, then select forum. Make sure you refresh the page!

The views of the poster, may not be the views of the website of "Minnesota Outdoorsman" therefore we are not liable for what our members post, they are solely responsible for what they post. They agreed to a user agreement when signing up to MNO.

Author Topic: What to do after the shot?  (Read 7124 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Outdoors Junkie

  • MNO Director
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 3915
  • Karma: +7/-0
  • AKA "Outdoors Junkie"
This is a great article I found on whitetaildeer.com

One of the biggest reasons why many animals are not recovered after being shot is that all too often bowhunters take up the trail too soon, simply bumping the animal away never to be found again.  What you do following the shot can make or break a successful recovery.

When mortality wounded 90% of deer will bed within 250 yards of the shot. If an animal dies beyond this most likely some outside factor pushed the animal. Think about all of the animals you've taken, found or lost. You've probably found at least one if not mutliple beds within this distance.

Now I' m not proclaiming myself the ultimate tracker/hunter but I can testify that my hunting partners and I have not lost an animal in many, many years and several of these recoveries were because of waiting for the right moment to trail the animal,  rather than the initial shot placement.

I'll give you an example of an animal that I made a poor shot on because I neglected to stop the animal and shot him on the move. At 25 yards I placed my arrow too far back on the buck.. As soon as I saw the arrow hit further back than I wanted, I knew immediately not to take up the track until at least 6 hours later. I shot this animal at 7:30 am and got out of my tree at 11:00 and left the woods. At 3:30 I returned to the woods and found my buck not 50 yards inside a woods at the last point I saw him. Had I not waited, there is a very good chance that  I wouldn't have found him due to the standing cornfields surrounding the woods he was bedded in. 

In this particular case I also glassed the animal immediately following the shot to verify the hit. One important note I always make is that binoculars are invaluable for archers not only to glass an animal post shot, but to watch for his movement once he moves off.  Quite often we as hunters get caught up in the heat of the moment and become unsure of our arrow's point of impact.  A good set of binoculars and some quick thinking can help you verify your shot placement and help you formulate the proper game plan for recovering your animal.

The following is a list of several tips that I feel are invaluable for bowhunters to use when deciding what to do both before and afterthe shot. In the past, many members of the HuntingNet.com Message Board have helped to tweak and add their own priceless tidbits of information as well.. Hopefully one of the tips here or posted herein will you in a speedy recovery this hunting season.

Use bright fletch.  You need to be able to see your arrow in flight, in the animal, and on the ground afterward. Dark arrows don't do you any good if you can' t see them.  If bright fletchings aren't enough, try using lighted arrow nocks for better visibility in low light conditions.

Binoculars - use them post shot!  They may be the most important tool you have after the shot.
Watch the animal after the shot.  Quite often an animal's body movement will help indicate to you what type of shot you got.  An animal that jumps straight in the air and bounds off out of sight is most likely mortally wounded and will not travel far.  However, if the animal hunches up and walks off or moves off slowly there is a good chance the hit was too far back and you need to wait at least 6 hours before taking up the trail.

"I hit him, now what?" 

Here are 7 surefire steps towards recovering your animal safely and securely:

1) Unless you witness a double lung pass through, I firmly believe to let an animal go for a couple hours rather than the common misconseption of half hour wait. Too many times a half hour isn't enough. The only shots that put an animal down quickly are double lung hits and heart shots.  If you don't see your animal fall within site, your best bet is to wait it out.

2) If you are not 100% sure of your hit, simply put.... wait!!! The animal isn't going to go anywhere, he's dead, why hurry?  Sit back, collect your thoughts, replay the shot, the hit, and where the animal went. Also, this gives you a chance to listen and relax. If your arrow was a pass thru, get down and get the arrow and study it and wait. Mark the direction but don' t pursue, if you wait, he'll be there or he'll live another day.

3) If you think it' s a single lung hit because of angle, wait at least 4 hours. This includes shots that are just under the spine and because of the angle you might have caught the second lung but missed the first.  Wait and let him expire.  Many people belive in "the void" which they claim is an area between a deer's lungs and spine where no vital organs reside.  This is a myth - if you place an arrow under the spine, you will catch at least one lung.

4) If you think you caught the liver wait and the animal will bleed out. Wait at least 4 hours to take up the trail - the animal will not go anywhere if given the chance to expire. Jump him and he may go forever. 

5)If you catch the guts only, you're in for at least a 6 hour minimum wait with 8 hours being more preferrable and overnight being the best case scenario. In case of rain or snow you should get down, find your arrow, find the blood trail, and wait for the next morning. If you know your property, you' ll find him close. 

6)Coyotes can and will give the location of your animal, if your worried about them, get down, listen for the them and move on them if you know they are on your animal. IF they are there, your animal won' t be so move on the coyotes and they may lead you to the animal. 

7) Whether your shot hits lungs, liver,or guts the key to a successful recovery is to  wait.  The animal is going to die just wait him out and your blood trail should be adequate a couple hours later.

Let' s recover the animals bowyers, we owe it to them, we owe it to each other, and we owe it to ourselves. Good luck out there....
« Last Edit: September 09/14/07, 02:41:40 PM by Outdoors_junkie »
www.mnoutdoorsman.com
Voted #1 Outdoors Website in MN

Offline Don Stenseth

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 379
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • Don Stenseth's Wildlife Photos
I always found it important after the shot while you are still up in the tree to mark visually the exact spot that the deer was standing when you shot and to also to mark visually the exact  spot that you last saw the animal,and keep those sights in view as you climb down. Everything looks so different when you get down. A deer can easily leap 10 or 15 yards at a time and it may take a couple of leaps for the heart to pump enough blood to leave a blood trail from a good hit and it should be much easier to see at the last spot you saw the animal. More times than not I found my animals shortly past the last spot I saw them. Also, Please do not take a shot that you are not positive that you can make. I always had to much respect for the animal to take an iffy shot. Also, please do not shoot more deer than you can use. The limits are pretty generous in most areas and I think to many people count their sucess on how many deer they shoot. Also be safe in that tree stand. Bad things can happen if you are not careful. I wish you all a safe and successful quality hunt.
« Last Edit: September 09/14/07, 05:00:30 PM by Don Stenseth »
Don Stenseth's Wildlife Photos

www.sitekreator.com/donstenseth

Offline Mayfly

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 5689
  • Karma: +0/-0
    • MNO
I always found it important after the shot while you are still up in the tree to mark visually the exact spot that the deer was standing when you shot and to also to mark visually the exact  spot that you last saw the animal,and keep those sights in view as you climb down. Everything looks so different when you get down. A deer can easily leap 10 or 15 yards at a time and it may take a couple of leaps for the heart to pump enough blood to leave a blood trail from a good hit and it should be much easier to see at the last spot you saw the animal. More times than not I found my animals shortly past the last spot I saw them. Also, Please do not take a shot that you are not positive that you can make. I always had to much respect for the animal to take an iffy shot. Also, please do not shoot more deer than you can use. The limits are pretty generous in most areas and I think to many people count their sucess on how many deer they shoot. Also be safe in that tree stand. Bad things can happen if you are not careful. I wish you all a safe and successful quality hunt.

Very good info Don...Thanks!

I have a question for you but it is off topic so I will start a new thread shortly.

 ;)

Offline tripnchip

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 715
  • Karma: +1/-1
All very good advice guy's and all normaly things I do.  The one other thing that I will do hunting this brush country is to mark  at least two blood spots if I am going to leave the deer over night.Hopfuly one of them is the last point of sighting. The markers remind me of direction of travel.

Offline Outdoors Junkie

  • MNO Director
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 3915
  • Karma: +7/-0
  • AKA "Outdoors Junkie"
We have a hunting party (in a slow year 4 of us, the biggest group we have had is 12).  If someone shoots, we wait 45 minutes then one or two of us will walk over to that person stand and help look for blood.  The person that fired the shot never leaves the stand and directs us which way to go.  We have very good results tracking this way.

In the past I have hunted a few times by myself and everything looks so different once you leave the stand and get to the ground.

So, Don Stenseth makes a very good suggestion about visually marking the exact spot before you get down out of the stand.
www.mnoutdoorsman.com
Voted #1 Outdoors Website in MN

Offline tripnchip

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 715
  • Karma: +1/-1
We do the waiting and team work during rifle season also. It realy does work great when the shooter sty's in his stand and can direct you to the last sighting or even the point the shot was taken at.

Offline Realtree

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 2921
  • Karma: +3/-0
  • MNO Member #128
    • The "20" Rifle & Pistol Club and Straight River Archery Club

We have also used this practice in our firearms season when the deer does not drop within sight of the shooter. You are absolutely correct OJ, it IS a completely different world when you climb down out of the stand and try to determine where the deer was at when you shot and which way it went, where it turned or bedded down, etc..

Another great tip, as always Don!!!    happy2.gif
The "20" Rifle & Pistol Club-Board Member
Straight River Archery Club-Board Member
Youth Archery Instructor
Archery enthusiast
Deer hunter
Coyote eradicator
Bow-fishing freshman

Offline Outdoors Junkie

  • MNO Director
  • Master Outdoorsman
  • *
  • Posts: 3915
  • Karma: +7/-0
  • AKA "Outdoors Junkie"
A great topic to bring back to the top now that the bow season is near.  :happy1:
www.mnoutdoorsman.com
Voted #1 Outdoors Website in MN

Offline Cody Gruchow

  • Master Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 4060
  • Karma: +3/-0
  • 2016 Mno rockbass challenge champion
how about you practice and not make a shot farther back. :rotflmao: im just kidding i know lots of things can happen. i have only shot 4 deer 1 buck and 3 does. only had to track one of them and it was the buck, due to bad bullet penetration. i was fortunate enough to find him after we stopped looking for him, he ended up dieing on the small road to our camp site by the river, we did wait over night and let me tell you having to wait over night for your first buck and looking for 5 hours then have it rain and lose all your blood really gets you down lol.  :oops1: :offtopic: great article

Offline Stensethfan

  • Xtreme Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 337
  • Karma: +0/-0
If everyone listened to Uncle Don (that is what I call him), the article and the other good team tracking tips I would imagine that the recovery rate would be about 99%.  Honest to the lord I only hunted (unfortunately) a handful of times with my uncle.  That being said I would say that 90% of the hunting knowledge and know how I have obtained has been from listening to his stories and lessons over the years.  I cannot tell you how many times I have been sitting in my stand looking at a deer that I wanted to shoot at and then hearing my Uncle's voice in the back of my head say "don't shoot unless you are sure you can make the shot," and then not even taking the safety off or drawing the bow.  I swear he has said it 100 times if he has said it once to me and it probably all started when I was about 6 years old.  Hopefully everyone is pumped to hit the woods on the 13th and good luck!! 
Don't shoot anything you do not plan on eating ~ D. S.
If the women don't find you handsome at least they will find you handy!  Red Green

Offline BOB_T

  • Minnow
  • *
  • Posts: 9
  • Karma: +0/-0
It happened to me on a Buck last year ...... I made a good lung shot , I watched the buck trot off for a few yards & he stopped to see what happened for a second & he proceeded to head back to where he came from & out of sight...........


I sat for 15 minutes until The does cleared the area & it got dark , I gathered my stuff & lowered it all as quiet as i could .... I got down as stealth like as possible & i walked out of the woods - The opposite direction of where the deer went............

I did bump some does & they ran back in the direction as the buck went ........ I thought I seen all the does clear the area ......... Never the less ,,, I went out as quiet & non threatening as possible & came back the next day .........




We did not find the buck ......... I lost blood at 20 yards after the shot , Found some specs another 15 yards later & then nothing........... I used Montec G5 100 grains last year & the blood trail was very poor.... Even after I knew I made a good shot in the lungs at 15 yards.


* I could have sat for another 10 - 15 minutes longer ......... But ,,, Im not sure if that would have even helped

Offline ironranger

  • Outdoorsman
  • Posts: 20
  • Karma: +0/-0
Last year on opening day I shot a doe, perfect shot in the heart. She did the typical run and then front legs gave out. Only went 40 yards and died. No tracking, no searching. That was lucky and most of the time unusual. Also last year while walking to my stand I came upon a group of deer 25 yards in front of me through the brush. Had a good shot but blew it, hurried the shot. Hit her way back. I waited a few hours and then went looking. No blood, no sign at all, nothing. Circled and searched for hours for any kind of sign. I gave up. The next day I went back again and way across two 40's (hay fields) and on my neighbors property the buzzard and eagles were circling big time. After getting permission I walked over there with the property owner and all we found was some hide and bones left. The coyotes or the wolves got her overnight, bummer.